Raising Cane's River Center Arena

The Raising Cane's River Center Arena (originally the Riverside Centroplex Arena and commonly known as the River Center Arena) is a multi-purpose arena in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, in the United States. The arena can be combined with the exhibition hall to create more than 100,000 square feet (10,000 m2) of contiguous convention or exhibit space.[1] The arena which opened in 1977 presents concerts, sporting events, theater events, trade shows, and family shows, with seating for up to 10,400 for concerts (permanent and floor seats), 8,900 for sporting events (permanent seats) and 4,500 for theatre events. Besides sporting events, the arena hosts the annual Louisiana Senior Beta Club Convention.

Raising Cane's River Center Arena
Map
Former namesRiverside Centroplex Arena (1977-2004)
Baton Rouge River Center Arena (2004-16)
Address275 River Rd S
Baton Rouge, LA 70802-5809
LocationRaising Cane's River Center
OwnerBaton Rouge Area Convention & Visitors Bureau
OperatorASM Global
Capacity8,900
OpenedJanuary 14, 1977 (1977-01-14)
Tenants
Baton Rouge Kingfish (ECHL) (1996–2003)
Baton Rouge Bombers (EISL) (1997–98)
Louisiana Bayou Beast (IPFL) (1999)
Baton Rouge Blaze (af2) (2001)
Baton Rouge Zydeco (FPHL) (2023–present)

In 2016, Raising Cane's Chicken Fingers signed a 10-year naming rights agreement for the arena.[2]

Teams edit

The arena has been home to multiple sports teams based in Baton Rouge. From 1996 to 2003, it was home to the Baton Rouge Kingfish hockey team of the (ECHL). Also during that time, the arena was home to the Baton Rouge Bombers indoor soccer team of the (EISL) from (1997-1998). The venue was home to two professional arena football teams, the Louisiana Bayou Beast of the (IPFL) in (1999) and the Baton Rouge Blaze of the (af2) in (2001).[3] Starting in the 2023 season, the arena will host the Baton Rouge Zydeco of the Federal Prospects Hockey League.[4]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "About us".
  2. ^ Gallo, Andrea (October 26, 2016). "It's official: Baton Rouge River Center to become Raising Cane's River Center". theadvocate.com. Georges Media. Retrieved April 12, 2017.
  3. ^ "Home". Raising Cane's River Center.
  4. ^ Cobler, Paul (July 18, 2022). "Lace 'em up: Ice hockey's back in Baton Rouge; after exhibition, new team could come in 2023". The Advocate.

External links edit

30°26′41″N 91°11′22″W / 30.4448°N 91.1894°W / 30.4448; -91.1894